UN Basic Principles for the Treatment of Prisoners affirm their fundamental rights. They require they "be treated with the respect due to their inherent dignity and value as human beings."

"There shall be no discrimination on the grounds of race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status."

"(A)ll prisoners shall be discharged in keeping with a State's other social objectives and its fundamental responsibilities for promoting the well-being and development of all members of society."

International human rights law prohibits cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment. It affirms the right to health.

It requires all members of society receive proper treatment to the extent feasible. Incarceration is no excuse to deny them.

Article 10 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) requires treating "(a)ll persons deprived of their liberty (with) humanity and respect for the inherent dignity of the human person."

"To the fullest extent of the means available to it, the Occupying Power has the duty of ensuring and maintaining, with the cooperation of national and local authorities, the medical and hospital establishments and services, public health and hygiene in the occupied territory, with particular reference to the adoption and application of the prophylactic and preventive measures necessary to combat the spread of contagious diseases and epidemics."

"Medical personnel of all categories shall be allowed to carry out their duties."

Article 91 affirms that "Every place of internment shall have an adequate infirmary, under the direction of a qualified doctor, where internees may have the attention they require, as well as an appropriate diet. Isolation wards shall be set aside for cases of contagious or mental diseases."

Article 92 states "Medical inspections of internees shall be made at least once a month."

"Their purpose shall be, in particular, to supervise the general state of health, nutrition and cleanliness of internees, and to detect contagious diseases, especially tuberculosis, malaria, and venereal diseases."

"Such inspections shall include, in particular, the checking of weight of each internee and, at least once a year, radioscopic examination."

Palestinians are willfully denied proper treatment. Ashraf Abu Dhra is one of many examples. In May 2006, he was imprisoned.

In 2008, he became disabled. In detention, he suffered lung failure, immunodeficiency and a brain virus. Deplorable medical neglect killed him.

In mid-November 2012, he was released. Ten days later, he lapsed into coma. On January 22, 2013, he died. Proper care would have saved him.

On January 2, 2012, Zakaria Issa succumbed to cancer. It was five months after being released. Israel denied him permission to receive specialized treatment in Jordan.

Since 1967, over 200 Palestinian prisoners died in captivity. Some from torture. Others from medical neglect.

Prison life for Muslims is hell. Horrific conditions include severe overcrowding, poor ventilation and sanitation, no change of clothes, adequate clothing, wooden planks with thin mattresses, filthy blankets, inadequate food in terms of quality, quantity or conformance with dietary requirements, restricted or no access to family members and counsel, as well as willful medical neglect.

All of the above is standard practice. Palestinians are treated like sub-humans. Societies perhaps are best judged by how they treat children, the elderly, the poor, most disadvantaged and prisoners.

America strikes out on all counts. So does Israel. Both countries systematically violate fundamental international law.

They do it unaccountably. They do it with impunity. They do it because international leaders able to act responsibly do nothing.

Working for Israel's Prison Service requires they abandon them. They do it voluntarily. They're more witch doctors than real ones.

They're complicit in torture and other forms of abuse. They commit crimes against humanity in the process.

They're accountable only to their conscience. Self-reproach isn't their long suit.

Ragheb Abu Dyak heads the Palestinian Prisoners' Club Association. Last November, he said health conditions for inmates were deplorable.

More than one-third of prisoners suffer illnesses and diseases. Poor treatment exacerbates them. Incarceration assures a lifetime of pain and suffering for thousands.

Since June 1967, well over 700,000 Palestinians were imprisoned. Most were males. According to Addameer, "the number of Palestinians detained (amounts to about) 40% of the total male Palestinian population in the OPT."

Arrests are routinely made. Palestinians are guilty of being non-Jews. Every day is Kristallnacht in Palestine. Normal life is denied. Racism is institutionalized.

State terror is official Israeli policy. So is collective punishment. Fear is constant. Peaceful public demonstrations are assaulted. Free expression and movement are prohibited. Population centers are isolated. Borders are closed.

Crimes of war and against humanity repeat without redress. Wanting to live free in sovereign Palestine is called terrorism.

Crimes against humanity persist without end. Palestinians are persecuted everywhere for any reason or none at all - at work, at home, at prayer, in school, at checkpoints, virtually anywhere. Appalling abuses follow.

Prison conditions cut them off entirely from the outside world. Isolated prisoners suffer most. So do chronically ill ones.

Proper treatment is willfully denied. Medical neglect is extreme. Required surgery takes months or years to get. Conditions go from bad to worse.

"The only medicine given for the treatment of all diseases is painkillers," said Addameer. Prison authorities "den(y) access (to) medicines from outside..."